Maxine’s Turing Test – A Player-Program as Co-Ethnographer of Socio-Aesthetic Interaction in Improvised Music

Authors

  • Ritwik Banerji University of California Berkeley

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aiide.v8i4.12565

Keywords:

interactive music systems, improvisation, user study, ethnography

Abstract

Beyond the goal of refining system design to the needs and tastes of users, user evaluation of interactive music systems offers a method of examining the nature of musical creativity as understood by its human practitioners. In the case of improvising music systems, user study and evaluation of a system’s ability to improvise may be useful in the ethnomusicological study of musical interaction in contemporary improvised music. A survey of preliminary findings based on the interactions of an improvising system, Maxine, with several improvisers is discussed, with results suggesting methodological reconfigurations of the purpose and goals of evaluating of interactive musical metacreations.

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Published

2021-06-30

How to Cite

Banerji, R. (2021). Maxine’s Turing Test – A Player-Program as Co-Ethnographer of Socio-Aesthetic Interaction in Improvised Music. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Interactive Digital Entertainment, 8(4), 2-7. https://doi.org/10.1609/aiide.v8i4.12565